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Publication : Therapeutic effect of {beta}-adrenoceptor blockers using a mouse model of dilated cardiomyopathy with a troponin mutation.

First Author  Zhan DY Year  2009
Journal  Cardiovasc Res Volume  84
Issue  1 Pages  64-71
PubMed ID  19477965 Mgi Jnum  J:173901
Mgi Id  MGI:5050540 Doi  10.1093/cvr/cvp168
Citation  Zhan DY, et al. (2009) Therapeutic effect of {beta}-adrenoceptor blockers using a mouse model of dilated cardiomyopathy with a troponin mutation. Cardiovasc Res 84(1):64-71
abstractText  AIMS: Extensive clinical studies have demonstrated that beta-adrenoceptor blocking agents (beta-blockers) are beneficial in the treatment of chronic heart failure, which is due to various aetiologies, including idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) and ischaemic heart disease. However, little is known about the therapeutic efficacy of beta-blockers in the treatment of the inherited form of DCM, of which causative mutations have recently been identified in various genes, including those encoding cardiac sarcomeric proteins. Using a mouse model of inherited DCM with a troponin mutation, we aim to study the treatment benefits of beta-blockers. METHODS AND RESULTS: Three different types of beta-blockers, carvedilol, metoprolol, and atenolol, were orally administered to a knock-in mouse model of inherited DCM with a deletion mutation DeltaK210 in the cardiac troponin T gene (TNNT2). Therapeutic effects were examined on the basis of survival and myocardial remodelling. The lipophilic beta(1)-selective beta-blocker metoprolol was found to prevent cardiac dysfunction and remodelling and extend the survival of knock-in mice. Conversely, both the non-selective beta-blocker carvedilol and the hydrophilic beta(1)-selective beta-blocker atenolol had no beneficial effects on survival and myocardial remodelling in this mouse model of inherited DCM. CONCLUSION: The highly lipophilic beta(1)-selective beta-blocker metoprolol, known to prevent ventricular fibrillation via central nervous system-mediated vagal activation, may be especially beneficial to DCM patients showing a family history of frequent sudden cardiac death, such as those with a deletion mutation DeltaK210 in the TNNT2 gene.
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